Some screw caps are a bit bigger than a cork is designed for, so you have to use discretion, but many screw cap bottles you can cork fine.jansman said:So. Let me get this straight. Can I cork a bottle with a screw threaded neck?
You need to be very careful. The necks are slightly wider, but more importantly the glass is slightly thinner, so you can break the bottle neck as you insert the cork. Some people do it. I don't.jansman said:So. Let me get this straight. Can I cork a bottle with a screw threaded neck?
They were my thoughts about screwtops. Thankyou(all).tonyhibbett said:Plastic topped corks are traditional for sherry, port etc and spirits, which have good keeping qualities once opened, unlike wine, and the bottle is stored upright. Screw caps were introduced because the world was running out of natural cork. They proved a superior alternative in terms of hygene and ease of opening. The logical successor, the wine box, has been less succesful, but for those who make wine in bulk (5 gallons) the polypin is brilliant and gives you wine on tap and can be re-used indefinitely, with careful handling, although the cardboard cases are the weak design aspect.
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